Fabled stories? Mythical now, is it?

(me laughing and crying... Hey Dragon! Could we get one emoticon for this please???)
As I stated three days ago in post #13 above,
So yes it could be symptoms of a worn head, but one must keep a cool head as we patiently and methodically follow industry standard diagnostic steps in the right order, escalating only as the simpler measure fail to remedy the problem/s.
Normal magnetic buildup occurs relatively evenly over time. However, sudden magnetization through a degaussing error is focused due to the small size of the probe. A tape head appears to be physically one piece, but it is not magnetically one piece. It should now be painfully clear (if it wasn’t before) why a demaging probe must be slowly waived over the head to degauss it thoroughly and evenly. If it was magnetically one, you could achieve degaussing by touching the probe to one corner.
It is a simple matter of physics that metal nearest the deqausser when power is lost would have a greater charge. A degausser creates a cyclically reversing magnetic field. If the alternating action stops close to the area being degaussed, that area will be charged with the last half-cycle before interruption. Areas further from the probe receive a weaker charge.
The induced magnetism follows the inverse square law as the device is moved away from the object being degaussed. Doubling the distance of the probe from the area of the head reduces the power to ¼ of what it is right at the tip. And we are talking tiny increments in distance here – millimeters. Magnetically speaking, the distance from one side of a tape head to the other is a long way. So yes, a group of tracks together could become more severely charged than the rest.
Now back to tape path cleaning – it’s the most important regular maintenance item on the list, and it is often neglected. No one on this forum has advocated cleaning as the only course of action, but simply the first course of action, and that it should be thorough. As in the case of sticky-shed a normal cleaning will not suffice. If you’ve never had to remove oxide shed from head relief slots at the edge-tracks with a toothpick and magnifying lens, well you just haven’t lived.
But even normal, uniform oxide buildup reduces tape-to-head contact to an unacceptable degree for serious recording. Narrower tracks and closely spaced tracks are more susceptible. So, an E-16 will present deterioration in audio performance due to oxide buildup sooner compared to a ¼” half-track using the same tape at the same speed. And again – the edge-tracks, the edge-tracks (say it with me) the edge-tracks… remember the edge-tracks – in this case 1 & 16. If bad tape has ever been run through this machine it is very likely the edge-tracks have never been fully cleared. Remember the toothpick… yeah, it gets that ugly and worse.
~Tim